Designed by Matt Keightley, the garden is a repetition of the Health and Wellbeing Garden he’s created for Wisley, due to open in 2020. “The main reason,” he explained, “was to create something fun and interactive, with decent vantage points around the garden and landscape, and views that you wouldn’t otherwise have.”
Providing this vantage point, with changing views, was, added Matt, “a supersize cantilever that physics shouldn’t allow.” At Chelsea, this translated into a feature made up of layers of cantilevered circles at different angles, so that a walkway translated into a bench as you moved round. The circles sit on a steel structure that creates the tilt in the different layers. Each circle was made of large sections of stone, joined together with resin. “The resin made it possible,” said Matt. “It was suggested by London Stone, and is three times stronger than the stone itself.”